Friday, February 2, 2007
Change of Vatican policy on condoms 'not on agenda'
AN UPDATE OF: Vatican To Allow Use of Condoms?
A change in the Vatican's position on the use of condoms is "not on the agenda," according to a doctrinal official, Monsignor Angelo Amato, quoted by web-based religious media.
"Whether the use of prophylactics is licit ... does not seem to me to be on the agenda," Amato told Avvenire, the journal of the Italian Bishops' Conference published Sunday.
Several prelates including Italian Cardinal Carlo Maria Martini have said in recent remarks that the condom could be considered a "lesser evil" in certain cases, such as when used by a married couple in which one partner has AIDS or is HIV-positive.
"Opinions on these issues coming from other institutions or ecclesiastical personalities, however respectable, cannot have the authority that sometimes the mass media seems to want to suggest," Amato said.
The Church's only recommendation for avoiding the spread of AIDS is chastity -- abstinence or conjugal fidelity.
The Vatican's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith -- headed by Pope Benedict XVI before his election as pontiff in April 2005 -- is charged with validating dogmatic positions taken by the Church.
Amato said the congregation was studying "the hypothesis of reviewing" bioethical questions raised in the 1987 document "Donum Vitae."
The aim is not "to abolish the preceding document, but to confront the various bioethical and biotechnological questions which present themselves today, which at the time were unthinkable," he said.
Amato said "new challenges" have arisen "such as an embryo which is considered a biological product rather than a human being," while according to the Catholic Church, "respect due to the human embryo is a non-negotiable anthropological principle."
The prelate could not say when the dossier would be submitted to the pope. — AFP
Labels: Catholic Belief, Contraceptives, News, Vatican
Subscribe to Posts [Atom]